Ancient Greek Literature

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Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-08-06
Publisher(s): Polity
List Price: $33.33

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Summary

In this book, Tim Whitmarsh offers an innovative new introduction to ancient Greek literature. The volume integrates cutting-edge cultural theory with the latest research in classical scholarship, providing a comprehensive, sophisticated and accessible account of literature from Homer to late antiquity.Whitmarsh offers new readings of some of the best-known and most influential authors of Greek antiquity, including Sophocles, Euripides, Herodotus, Aristophanes and Plato, as well as introducing many lesser-known figures. Unlike conventional narrative histories, this volume focuses on the profound effects of literature within Greek society. Whitmarsh shows that literature, distributed via a range of social institutions, such as festivals, theatres, symposia and book production, played an important role in the legitimization - and challenging - of ideologies of gender, class and cultural identity. The volume also addresses the legacy of Greek literature: how the Victorian cult of Hellenism and its successors have structured the reception of ancient texts, and how and why the modern West has adopted the Greeks as its ancestors.This book will be important reading for undergraduates, in their first year and above, of ancient Greek literature and culture. All texts in the volume are translated, and no knowledge of ancient Greek literature is assumed.

Author Biography

Tim Whitmarsh is a reader in Greek Literature at the University of Exeter

Table of Contents

Preface vii
Part I Concepts 1(32)
1 Greek Literature and Cultural History
3(15)
2 The Problem of Tradition
18(15)
Part II Contexts 33(126)
3 Festival
35(17)
4 Symposium
52(16)
5 Theatre
68(19)
6 The Power of Speech
87(19)
7 Inventing the Archive: Athens
106(16)
8 Building the Archive: Hellenistic Alexandria
122(17)
9 Reading from the Archive: Roman Greece
139(20)
Part III Conflicts 159(70)
10 Inventing the Greek: Cultural Identity
161(16)
11 A Woman's Place
177(19)
12 Sexing the Text
196(17)
13 Status and Slavery
213(16)
Notes 229(17)
Chronology of Greek Literature 246(5)
References 251(25)
Index of Greek Authors 276(3)
General Index 279

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